Word: cured
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...Cure for the Rat Race. Even Lyndon Johnson has now declared himself the bicyclist's friend. Calling bike riders "the forgotten outdoorsmen of today," he said last March, "I see an America where our air is sweet to breathe and our rivers clean to swim in. I see an America where bicycle paths running through the hearts of our great cities provide wholesome, healthy recreation for entire families." Picking up his cue, the Interior Department now plans to build 10,000 miles of bike paths in national parks in the next decade...
...arrived at her probation hearing, Nancy accepted Judge Kearney's offer of sterilization-only to be dissuaded later by her family, her doctor and a local priest. When newspapers broke the story, more than 300 citizens offered to sign a petition declaring that sterilization is hardly a cure for Nancy's problems. Calling Judge Kearney's offer "cruel and unusual punishment," Lawyer Renga also pointed out that California law specifies "reasonable" conditions for probation toward the end that "rehabilitation will be served...
...largely replacing the helpless sympathy of bygone days. The future success of the doctor-patient relationship depends on the patient's understanding of the many difficulties and uncertainties the physician faces, and upon the physician's welcoming the patient into understanding and participation in the care and cure of his own illness...
...mutual interest," outsiders could only guess at the real substance of the conversations. After all, there were plenty of signs that Rumania was taking an active role in European Communist affairs-a role that could only annoy Moscow. Premier Ion Gheorghe Maurer was in Geneva ostensibly for a "cure"-but possibly in some connection with the talks that Averell Harriman was conducting with the International Red Cross about U.S. prisoners in North Viet Nam. Rumania's First Vice President Emil Bodnaras was huddling with Ho Chi Minh in Hanoi. Then Bodnaras stopped off in Peking to chat with...
...takes twelve to 18 months before a first hearing on any charge; a final judgment takes years. The clog in courthouse and jailhouse gets worse as each year gets older. Then, every so often, just before the jam-up becomes impossible to handle, the Italians resort to a sure cure: a general amnesty for all but the most dangerous offenders...